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File:Cdn1867.PNG The initial seat distribution of the 1st Canadian Parliament
Sir John A. Macdonald was Prime Minister during the 1st Canadian Parliament.
The 1st Canadian Parliament was in session from November 6, 1867 until July 8, 1872. The membership was set by the 1867 federal election from August 7 to September 20, 1867, and it changed only somewhat due to resignations and by-elections until it was prorogued prior to the 1872 election .
It was controlled by a Conservative /Liberal-Conservative Party majority under Prime Minister Sir John A. Macdonald . The Official Opposition was the Liberal Party , led by Edward Blake from 1869 to 1871.
The Speaker was James Cockburn . See also List of Canadian electoral districts 1867-1871 for a list of the ridings in this parliament.
There were 5 sessions of the 1st Parliament:
Session
Start
End
1st
November 6 , 1867
May 22 , 1868
2nd
April 15 , 1869
June 22 , 1869
3rd
February 15 , 1870
May 12 , 1870
4th
February 15 , 1871
April 14 , 1871
5th
April 11 , 1872
June 14 , 1872
Nova Scotia
The Anti-Confederate Party dissolved after failing to secure Nova Scotia's secession from Confederation. In 1869 its members joined other parties, or in one case sat as an independent.
New Brunswick
Quebec
Riding
Member
Party
Argenteuil
John Abbott
Liberal-Conservative
Bagot
Pierre-Samuel Gendron
Conservative
Beauce
Christian Pozer
Liberal
Beauharnois
Michael Cayley
Conservative
Bellechasse
Louis Napoléon Casault to May 26 , 1870 (appointed to Superior Court of Quebec )
Conservative
Télesphore Fournier from August 15 , 1870
Liberal
Berthier
Anselme Pâquet
Liberal
Bonaventure
Théodore Robitaille
Conservative
Brome
Christopher Dunkin * to October 24 , 1871 (appointed to Superior Court of Quebec )
Conservative
Edward Carter from November 17 , 1871
Conservative
Chambly
Pierre Benoit
Conservative
Champlain
John Jones Ross
Conservative
Charlevoix
Simon Xavier Cimon
Conservative
Châteauguay
Luther Holton
Liberal
Chicoutimi—Saguenay
Pierre Alexis Tremblay
Liberal
Compton
John Henry Pope *
Liberal-Conservative
Dorchester
Hector-Louis Langevin
Conservative
Drummond—Arthabaska
Louis Adélard Sénécal
Conservative
Gaspé
Pierre Fortin
Conservative
Hochelaga
Antoine Dorion
Liberal
Huntingdon
John Rose * to September 30 , 1869 (appointed to Senate)
Liberal-Conservative
Julius Scriver from October 30 , 1869
Liberal
Iberville
François Béchard
Liberal
Jacques Cartier
Guillaume Gaucher
Conservative
Joliette
François Benjamin Godin
Liberal
Kamouraska
no election in 1867 due to rioting
Charles Pelletier from February 17 , 1869
Liberal
Laprairie
Alfred Pinsonneault
Conservative
L'Assomption
Louis Archambeault
Liberal-Conservative
Laval
Joseph Bellerose
Conservative
Lévis
Joseph Blanchet
Liberal-Conservative
L'Islet
Barthélemy Pouliot *
Conservative
Lotbinière
Henri Joly De Lotbinière
Liberal
Maskinongé
George Caron
Conservative
Mégantic
George Irvine
Conservative
Missisquoi
Brown Chamberlin to June 6 , 1870 (resigned to become Queen's Printer)
Conservative
George Baker from July 5 , 1870
Liberal-Conservative
Montcalm
Joseph Dufresne to July 13 , 1871 (resigned)
Conservative
Firmin Dugas from September 15 , 1871
Conservative
Montmagny
Joseph-Octave Beaubien
Conservative
Montmorency
Joseph Cauchon to November 1 , 1867
Conservative
Jean Langlois from December 11 , 1867
Conservative
Montreal Centre
Thomas Workman
Liberal
Montreal East
George-Étienne Cartier
Liberal-Conservative
Montreal West
Thomas D'Arcy McGee to April 7 , 1868 (assassinated)
Liberal-Conservative
Michael Patrick Ryan from April 20 , 1868
Liberal-Conservative
Napierville
Sixte Coupal dit la Reine
Liberal
Nicolet
Joseph Gaudet
Conservative
Ottawa (County of)
Alonzo Wright
Liberal-Conservative
Pontiac
Edmund Heath
Conservative
Portneuf
Jean Brousseau
Conservative
Quebec-Centre
Georges-Honoré Simard
Conservative
Quebec County
Pierre-Joseph-Olivier Chauveau
Conservative
Quebec East
Pierre Huot to June 14 , 1870 (resigned to become Postmaster of Quebec)
Liberal
Adolphe Guillet dit Tourangeau from July 18 , 1870
Conservative
Quebec West
Thomas McGreevy
Liberal-Conservative
Richelieu
Thomas McCarthy to September 23 , 1870 (death)
Conservative
Georges Isidore Barthe from November 18 , 1870
Independent Conservative
Richmond—Wolfe
William Hoste Webb
Conservative
Rimouski
George Sylvain
Conservative
Rouville
Guillaume Cheval dit St-Jacques
Liberal
Saint Maurice
Louis Léon Lesieur Desaulniers to September 29 , 1868 (resigned)
Conservative
Élie Lacerte from October 30 , 1868
Conservative
Shefford
Lucius Huntington
Liberal
Sherbrooke (Town of)
Alexander Galt
Liberal-Conservative
Soulanges
Luc Masson
Conservative
St. Hyacinthe
Alexandre Kierzkowski to August 4 , 1870 (death)
Liberal
Louis Delorme from September 1 , 1870
Liberal
St. John's
François Bourassa
Liberal
Stanstead
Charles Colby
Liberal-Conservative
Témiscouata
Charles Bertrand
Conservative
Terrebonne
Louis Masson
Conservative
Three Rivers
Louis Boucher De Niverville to September 30 , 1868 (resigned)
Conservative
William McDougall from October 17 , 1868
Conservative
Two Mountains
Jean-Baptiste Daoust
Conservative
Vaudreuil
Donald McMillan
Conservative
Verchères
Félix Geoffrion
Liberal
Yamaska
Moïse Fortier
Liberal
Four Quebec members recontested their seats in byelections, and were re-elected:
John Rose was reelected in Huntingdon on November 28 , 1867 , after being named Minister of Finance.
Barthélemy Pouliot was unseated on petition, but was reelected in L'Islet on July 14 , 1869 .
Christopher Dunkin was reelected in Brome on November 29 , 1869 , after being named Minister of Agriculture.
John Henry Pope was reelected in Compton on November 11 , 1871 , after being named Minister of Agriculture following Dunkin's resignation from Parliament.
Ontario
Riding
Member
Party
Addington
James N. Lapum
Conservative
Algoma
Wemyss Mackenzie Simpson to April 26 , 1871 (appointed Indian Commissioner for Rupert's Land )
Conservative
Frederick William Cumberland from June 30 , 1871
Conservative
Bothwell
David Mills
Liberal
Brant North
John Young Bown
Liberal-Conservative
Brant South
Hon. Edmund Burke Wood
Liberal
Brockville
James Crawford
Conservative
Bruce North
Alexander Sproat
Conservative
Bruce South
Francis Hurdon
Conservative
Cardwell
Thomas Roberts Ferguson
Conservative
Carleton
John Holmes
Liberal-Conservative
Cornwall
Hon. John Sandfield Macdonald
Liberal
Dundas
John Sylvester Ross
Liberal-Conservative
Durham East
Francis H. Burton
Conservative
Durham West
Edward Blake
Liberal
Elgin East
Thomas William Dobbie
Conservative
Elgin West
John H. Munroe
Conservative
Essex
John O'Connor
Conservative
Frontenac
Thomas Kirkpatrick to March 26 , 1870 (death)
Conservative
George Airey Kirkpatrick from April 27 , 1870
Conservative
Glengarry
Donald Alexander Macdonald
Liberal
Grenville South
Walter Shanly
Conservative
Grey North
George Snider
Liberal
Grey South
George Jackson
Conservative
Haldimand
David Thompson
Liberal
Halton
John White
Liberal
Hamilton
Charles Magill
Liberal
Hastings East
Hon. Robert Read to February 24 , 1871 (appointed to Senate)
Conservative
John White from March 20 , 1871
Conservative
Hastings North
Mackenzie Bowell
Conservative
Hastings West
James Brown
Conservative
Huron North
Joseph Whitehead
Liberal
Huron South
Malcolm Colin Cameron
Liberal
Kent
Rufus Stephenson
Conservative
Kingston
The Right Honourable Sir John A. Macdonald , Prime Minister of Canada
Liberal-Conservative
Lambton
Alexander Mackenzie
Liberal
Lanark North
Hon. William C.B. McDougall
Liberal-Conservative
Lanark South
Alexander Morris *
Conservative
Leeds North and Grenville North
Francis Jones
Conservative
Leeds South
John Willoughby Crawford
Conservative
Lennox
Richard John Cartwright
Conservative
Lincoln
Hon. James Rea Benson to March 14 , 1868 (appointed to the Senate)
Liberal-Conservative
Thomas Rodman Merritt from April 13 , 1868
Liberal
London
Hon. John Carling
Liberal-Conservative
Middlesex East
Crowell Willson
Liberal-Conservative
Middlesex North
Thomas Scatcherd
Liberal
Middlesex West
Angus Peter McDonald
Conservative
Monck
Lachlin McCallum
Liberal-Conservative
Niagara
Angus Morrison
Conservative
Norfolk North
Aquila Walsh
Conservative
Norfolk South
Peter Lawson
Liberal
Northumberland East
Joseph Keeler
Liberal-Conservative
Northumberland West
Hon. James Cockburn
Conservative
Ontario North
John Hall Thompson
Liberal
Ontario South
Thomas Nicholson Gibbs
Liberal-Conservative
City of Ottawa
Joseph Merrill Currier
Liberal-Conservative
Oxford North
Thomas Oliver
Liberal
Oxford South
Ebenezer Vining Bodwell
Liberal
Peel
Hon. John Hillyard Cameron
Conservative
Perth North
James Redford
Liberal
Perth South
Robert MacFarlane
Liberal
Peterborough East
Peregrine Maitland Grover
Conservative
Peterborough West
Charles Perry
Conservative
Prescott
Albert Hagar
Liberal
Prince Edward
Walter Ross
Liberal
Renfrew North
John Rankin to October 12 , 1869 (resigned)
Conservative
Francis Hincks from November 13 , 1869
Liberal-Conservative
Renfrew South
Daniel McLachlin to June 3 , 1869 (resigned)
Liberal
John Lorn McDougall from July 12 , 1869
Liberal
Russell
James Alexander Grant
Conservative
Simcoe North
Thomas David McConkey
Liberal
Simcoe South
William Carruthers Little
Liberal-Conservative
Stormont
Samuel Ault
Liberal-Conservative
Toronto East
James Beaty
Conservative
Victoria North
John Morison
Liberal
Victoria South
George Kempt
Liberal
Waterloo North
Isaac Erb Bowman
Liberal
Waterloo South
James Young
Liberal
Welland
Thomas Clark Street
Conservative
Wellington Centre
Thomas Sutherland Parker to October 24 , 1868 (death)
Liberal
James Ross from January 18 , 1869
Liberal
Wellington North
George Alexander Drew
Liberal-Conservative
Wellington South
David Stirton
Liberal
Wentworth North
James McMonies
Liberal
Wentworth South
Joseph Rymal
Liberal
West Toronto
Robert Alexander Harrison
Conservative
York East
James Metcalfe
Liberal
York North
James Pearson Wells
Liberal
York West
Hon. William Pearce Howland to July 14 , 1868 (appointed Lieutenant Governor of Ontario )
Liberal-Conservative
Amos Wright from August 14 , 1868
Liberal
One Ontario MP, Alexander Morris , recontested his seat in a byelection. He was reelected in Lanark South on November 29 , 1869 , after being appointed Minister of Inland Revenue.
Manitoba
Manitoba joined Confederation in 1870 . Byelections to choose Manitoba's representatives were held on March 2 and March 3 , 1871 .
British Columbia
British Columbia joined Confederation in 1871 . Byelections to choose the province's representatives were held in November and December of that year.
Succession
Template:Succession box three to one to one
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